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Mark LaNeve, GM's vice president of North American sales, said in conference calls to dealers that the increases will allow GM to recover only part of the rising cost of steel and other commodities and the cost of safety and other features on the new models. The increases will amount to about $1,000 per vehicle.
GM already had increased the prices of its 2008 model year vehicles twice because of rising commodity costs, spokesman John McDonald said. The move comes a little more than a week after Chrysler LLC announced a 2 percent increase in the price of its remaining 2008 vehicles.
GM also said Monday it will further cut SUV and truck production, and it will run a sale June 24-30 to help clear out high inventories of 2008 pickups, sport utility vehicles and larger cars. The sale includes zero percent financing for up to 72 months.
"We're really just trying to spark the market at the end of the quarter," LaNeve said.
GM shares fell 88 cents, or 6.4 percent, to close at $12.91 after plummeting to $12.75 earlier in the day. That was the lowest they'd fallen since February 1982, when they hit $12.70 per share, according to the University of Chicago's Center for Research in Security Prices.
LaNeve said zero-percent deals are usually successful, but it's unclear if they'll have any effect in such a weak market. U.S. auto sales were down 8 percent through May due to the economy, low consumer confidence and high gas prices, and LaNeve said sales have been soft in June.
Trucks and SUVs have seen the sharpest decline. Sales of the Chevrolet Silverado large pickup were down 26 percent through May, while sales of the Chevrolet Tahoe large SUV fell 30 percent. It takes dealers more than 90 days to sell each of those vehicles in an industry where 60 days is the average turn rate, according to J.D. Power and Associates' Power Information Network.
Photo: AFP